EVOLUTION OF INTEL X ARCHITECTURE We have Two computer families the Intel x and the ARM architecture. The current x offerings represent the results of decades of design effort on complex instruction set computers (CISCs). The x incorporates the sophisticated design principles once found only on mainframes and supercomputers and serves as an excellent example of CISC design. An alternative approach to processor design in the reduced instruction set computer (RISC. The ARM architecture is used in a wide variety of embedded systems and is one of the most powerful and best-designed RISC-based systems on the market. In terms of market share, Intel has ranked as the number one maker of microprocessors for non-embedded systems for decades, a position it seems unlikely to yield. Interestingly, as microprocessors have grown faster and much more complex, Intel has actually picked up the pace. Intel used to develop microprocessors one after another, every four years. It is worthwhile to list some of the highlights of the evolution of the Intel product line • 8080: The world’s first general-purpose microprocessor. This was an bit machine, with an bit data path to memory. The 8080 was used in the first personal computer, the Altair. • 8086: A far more powerful, bit machine. In addition to a wider data path and larger registers, the 8086 sported an instruction cache, or queue, that prefetches a few instructions before they are executed. A variant of this processor, the 8088, was used in IBM’s first personal computer, securing the success of Intel. The 8086 is the first appearance of the x architecture. • 80286: This extension of the 8086 enabled addressing a 16-MByte memory instead of just 1 MByte. • 80386: Intel’s first bit machine, and a major overhaul of the product. With a bit
|